transformational crisis leadership during catastrophic … · presented by: brad hove...
TRANSCRIPT
Presented by:Brad Hove
4 November 2015
Transformational Crisis Leadership During Catastrophic Events
Major Research Project
Introduction
1. About the Project
2. Literature Review
3. Case Study: Strategic Leadership during the 2013 Southern Alberta Floods
4. Key Findings
5. Conclusion
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About the Project:
Final criteria for a Master of Arts in Disaster & Emergency Management
11 months to complete (approx. 400 hours)
Academic Supervisor & Ethical Review
Extensive Literature Review
Research: Strategic Crisis
Leadership during the 2013
Southern Alberta Floods
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Choosing an MRP Topic:
Personal Experience
Repercussions of the decisions leaders make on the people below them (in the field)
Questions & Interests from 1 year of study
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Three Questions Directing Research:
1. What are the strengths and challenges of strategic crisis leaders during catastrophic events?
2. What might be helpful for leadership development in future catastrophic events?
3. What is the viability of creating a transformational crisis leadership model?
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Literature Review – Looking for GAPS.
During times of crisis, leadership is needed themost; however, leadership in extreme eventsand contexts has proven to be amongst theleast researched topics in the field
Lack of a strategic crisis leadership model
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Literature Review: Crisis Leadership During Catastrophic Events
Japan Earthquake, Tsunami & Nuclear Disaster (2011)
Magnitude 9.0 Earthquake resulting in 30 meter high waves (tsunami) over 500 km of
Japan’s northeastern cost resulting in a death toll of 15,000 people and damage to
the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant.7
Hurricane Katrina (2005)
Sustained winds of 200 km/h at landfall resulting in 1,836 fatalities (Jones, 2010)
Haiti Earthquake (2010)
Magnitude 7.0 Earthquake resulting in over 300,000 fatalities (Olafsson, 2013)
Transformational Crisis Leadership
Transformational Leadership
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+Crisis
Leadership
Case Study – Strategic Crisis Leadership during the 2013 Southern Alberta Floods
11 interviews (telephone & in-person) with strategic crisis leaders across Southern Alberta who were directly or indirectly involved with the floods
5 different jurisdictions (Calgary, High River, SiksikaNation, Canmore & Exshaw)
Private, public and non-profit sectors at provincial & local level
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Elected Officials
EOC - Emergency Operations Centre
ICP Incident Command Post
Case Study – Strategic Crisis Leadership during the 2013 Southern Alberta Floods
Interview Questions
1. Top 3 strengths of successful strategic crisis leaders?
2. Biggest challenge and how it was overcome?
3. Skills and traits required when responding to extreme disaster events?
4. Training requirements/recommendations?
5. Tips for future strategic crisis leaders?
6. Additional thoughts, insights or ideas?
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Case Study – Strategic Leadership during the 2013 Southern Alberta Floods
Data Collection349 codes (separate findings)
32 themes
4 topics:
1. Strategic crisis leadership preparation
2. Strategic crisis leadership during the response
3. Recovery leadership
4. Additional tips from the experts
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KEY FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
1. Three Guiding Principles:
Patience, Courage & Humility
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FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
Patience
“Good Crisis Leadership is about staying calm, notoverreacting, not becoming too intense or stressed outabout situations, controlling your emotions and havingthe ability to not let the situation overwhelm you.”
– Interviewee F
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FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
Courage
“You will have to make tough decisions, you need themoral courage and decisiveness to make those decisions.When people were afraid to make tough decisions theysometimes added to a disaster as opposed to helpingresolve it. Have faith in the decisions you’ve made andcommunicate them as effectively as you outwardly can.”
– Interviewee G
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FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
Humility
“Go in with an open mind, not havingpreconceived notions on how everything’s goingto work out because it usually doesn’t work outthat way at all.”
– Interviewee G
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FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
2. Get Experience
“You could have all the crisis leadership training in the world and still curl up into a fetal position under your
desk during a crisis.” – Interviewee E
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FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
3. Participate in exercises“Exercising is the equivalent of weight lifting for emergency
managers.”
– Interviewee G
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FINDINGS: LEADERSHIP PREPARATION
4. Build Relationships – A friendship network
Include political leaders in network.
Build comprehensive networks within your relationships.
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FINDINGS: BIGGEST CHALLENGES AND
HOW THEY WERE OVERCOME.
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KEY FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
Challenge #1: Having problems without solutions.
Solutions:
Be open to unique, unorthodox or unusual solutions
Engage your team and the public21
FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
Challenge # 2: A of lack understanding towards Social Services.
“Social services is one of the more grey areas. The council and the province know to go to a fire chief first for fire [and] to a police chief [for security]. It is a little more vague when it comes to human services.”
-Interviewee K
Solution: Know who the experts are.22
FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
Challenge # 3: Dealing with the sheer magnitude of the event and the unknown.
“We had it all at once, train derailments, large fires, floods, massivepower failures, mass evacuation, closing the downtown core. At timesyou kind of look up from the mayhem and look to the skies and say,“What’s happening here?”
- Interviewee CSolutions: Maintain a strategic level of leadership Knowing how to prioritize extremelywell Having self-care and the ability to manage stress 23
“It is almost impossible for someone to beoperational and strategic at the same time. Youneed someone to be running the show, makingmanagement decisions. And then you need aleader looking forward in time and space to seewhat’s going on. I can’t overstate it. Have anoperational person and add a strategic person andyou can get out and see what’s actually happeningand make way better decisions. Put people who aregood at their jobs and in charge of their jobs andleave them alone. If you are in charge of this thentake a very strategic perspective on them.”
- Interviewee E24
FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
Challenge # 4: Knowing how to safely get evacuees home.
“The perception was we will never get out of this. My argument was […] you need to give people hope, hope of a better day. And people don’t need a lot more than hope.”
- Interviewee C
Solutions: Provide hope and vision Ability to empower the people Putting people before process 25
FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
Challenge # 5: Internal/Organizational ChallengesGetting buy-in from senior management
Dealing with drastic changes to the internal organizational structure
Solution:Having confidence and
trust in your team26
FINDINGS: STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP DURING THE RESPONSE
Challenge # 6: External Communication and Collaboration Challenges
Trying to coordinate with multiple governments and agenciesUnified Command
Solutions:Negotiation skillsEngaging the business community27
KEY FINDINGS: RECOVERY LEADERSHIP
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“The disaster was an easier time than the recovery time.The recovery time has been more challenging on myleadership skills.”
-Interviewee K
Topics:1. Recovery challenges2. Recovery skills
KEY FINDINGS: RECOVERY LEADERSHIP
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1. Recovery Leadership Challenges
Lack of training in recovery leadership
Tough working environment
KEY FINDINGS: RECOVERY LEADERSHIP
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2. Recovery Skills
Understand social vulnerabilities Utilize local resources Bring people together
KEY FINDINGS: ADDITIONAL TIPS FROM THE EXPERTS
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1. Study the longitudinal impacts of an event2. We need more lessons learned from a leadership
perspective
CONCLUSION
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1. Key challenges and the strengths needed to overcome them.
2. Helpful tips for strategic crisis leaders
3. Developing a transformational crisis leadership model would be viable and enhance the capacity of strategic crisis leaders to respond and recover from catastrophic events.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH
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1. How can politicians better prepare for catastrophic events?
2. A comparison between crisis leadership and recovery leadership.
3. Development and adoption of a transformational crisis leadership model.
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Thank You
Any Questions?
Bradley Hove MA(DEM), AMBCI
ConsultantToll Free: 1.800.718.3762Office: 780.483.9168Cell: [email protected]